Raised From The Dead - Reinhard Bonnke (Naijasermons - Com.ng)
Raised From The Dead - Reinhard Bonnke (Naijasermons - Com.ng)
Raised From The Dead - Reinhard Bonnke (Naijasermons - Com.ng)
of Contents
DAY OF DECISION
For more than a decade, Daniel’s story has been told. He has distilled his story
into a single document and has spoken to audiences around the world. As with
all stories, each storyteller approaches the events of their tale from a unique
angle. Each one brings out details that others might have missed or considered
unimportant. It is similar to the Gospels: Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. Taken
together, these four books provide a broader, more complete picture of Jesus’ life
than any one version would have done by itself.
With that in mind, this is the first version of Daniel’s story told from my own
unique—and until now—unexplained part in this drama.
Before I begin, I ask you to put yourself in my shoes on Saturday, December 1,
2001—twenty-four hours before the miracle happened.
You will find me in my room at the Sheraton Hotel in Lagos, Nigeria. Do you
remember where you were on that day? Do you remember what was on your
mind? I do. I will never forget it. These were world-changing times for me, and I
had on my heart a big burden to pray.
A NO-BRAINER
This burden to pray resulted from several issues that had been pressing on me.
Primarily, it came from a major decision I faced—the question of whether I
should move my family and ministry from Frankfurt, Germany, to Orlando,
Florida. At the time, my team was producing a motion-picture series in Orlando
entitled Full Flame. It was an eight-episode documentary drawn from my life
experiences. We were also publishing study guides that would supplement the
content of each film and teach our outreach methods to young evangelists around
the world.
This project was to be a legacy of my ministry, and it was a huge undertaking. It
meant that I had to travel again and again to Universal Studios in Florida to film
the documentary segments. My team suggested that if I moved there, it would
save hundreds of hours of travel time, reduce the wear and tear on my body, and
give me more time to spend at home with my family. Not to mention, it would
also save us hundreds of thousands of dollars in production costs. It was, as they
say, a “no-brainer.” It made perfect business sense. Yet I could not make the
decision so easily.
It was not perfect business sense that had led my evangelistic ministry, Christ
for All Nations, to the kind of success we had been experiencing. In fact, the
Spirit of God had led us to a harvest no other evangelist had ever witnessed in
the recorded history of the church. Who was I to impose mere business sense on
the work of the Lord? I had offices in the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia,
Hong Kong, Singapore, Nigeria, and South Africa. However, the executive and
management decisions proceeded from Frankfurt, Germany, where I lived.
Germany was my fatherland, by birth and by divine guidance. God had ordained
it to be so.
For those who do not know me, let me pause to introduce myself.
I am Reinhard Bonnke, a German-born evangelist. I went to South Africa in
1967 as a missionary. That move was not undertaken lightly. I had received a
clear call to Africa as ten-year-old boy. I was the son of a German Pentecostal
preacher, but not even my parents believed in my call. Shortly after my arrival in
Africa at the age of twenty-seven, the Lord moved me away from the status of
“missionary.”
The mission organization had kept me preaching primarily to white people. In
1968, I began to preach to black people, and I experienced the true passion of
my calling. I began playing my accordion to attract crowds on the streets of
Maseru, in the mountain kingdom of Lesotho. Sometimes, I preached only to the
two or three people who had stopped to stare at the blond-haired, blue-eyed
foreigner playing and singing in a language they did not understand. The small
size of my crowds did not affect me. I preached the same then as I do now,
through an interpreter; except that today, the crowds can number more than one
million people. But no one begins at the top. After becoming an evangelist in
1968, I began to reach more and more Africans as I followed the still, small
voice of the Spirit of God within my heart. (See 1 Kings 19:12.)
In 1986, after eighteen years in South Africa, the Lord directed me to move my
headquarters to Frankfurt. I was forty-six years old. The divine timing of this
move prevented the stain of apartheid from affecting the work of our ministry.
For the next eight years, South Africa struggled to transition to its new form of
democracy. Meanwhile, Christ for All Nations was catapulted into favor and
prominence all over Africa. This was not the kind of blessing that came from
careful business planning. It had come from the hand of God alone, and I knew
it.
Then, in 2000, we experienced the Millennium Crusade in Lagos, Nigeria. It
marked a pinnacle in the journey of that young German boy who had heard the
voice of God calling him to Africa to win souls for Christ. On the final night of
that crusade, I preached the gospel to a crowd of 1.6 million people. My team
had trained more than 200,000 people to follow up with the attendees over the
course of six days of meetings. Those workers were equipped with $1.2 million
in books and discipleship materials. We had 2,000 ushers and 1,000 local
policemen for crowd control. On that final night, when I gave the invitation for
sinners to repent, 1,093,000 people made the decision to put their faith in Jesus.
Over those six days, more than 6 million Nigerians attended the crusade, with a
total of 3,461,171 decisions for Christ registered. These numbers stagger the
mind.
PRESERVING THE
MILLENNIUM HARVEST
On Saturday, December 1, 2001, as I pondered the question of whether to move
to America, we were still riding the crest of the Millennium Crusade. I had
recently traveled the one hundred miles from Ibadan to Lagos, in order to rest
and prepare for the final meetings of the year in the smaller city of Oshogbo,
Nigeria. In Ibadan, our crowds had swelled to 1.3 million people by the final
night. A total of 3.9 million people had attended the event, with more than 2.6
million accepting Christ.
The supernatural millennium harvest was continuing at full force in 2001. This
is called momentum. Anyone who watches sporting events knows the power of
momentum. An inferior team can often defeat a superior team by riding a wave
of momentum to an unexpected result. With such momentum moving our
ministry, how could I risk stopping it by undertaking such a drastic change of
relocating to a different continent? We had registered more than 52 million
decisions for Christ during more than a decade of directing our efforts from our
home in Frankfurt.
Adding to the pressure, the upcoming meetings in Oshogbo were heavy on my
mind. I had recently received a phone call telling me that Sunday Aranziola, the
young bass guitarist scheduled to play in our crusade band, had been martyred in
Oshogbo by Muslim extremists only a few days prior. This killing had occurred
only two months after the September 11 attacks in the U.S. The whole world was
reeling with fear and uncertainty. How many worshippers of Allah would be
stirred to strike a blow for the cause of jihad? Nobody knew. This young man
named Sunday had been targeted while putting up Reinhard Bonnke crusade
posters throughout the city. The radicals had followed him to his home, waited
for the cover of darkness, and then had broken down the door and, in front of his
father and mother, dragged him from his bed, beating him with clubs.
“Jesus, what shall I do?” his father had heard him call as he was driven from the
house into the darkened street. “What shall I do?”
“Say ‘Allahu akbar’!” the young men demanded. “Say it! ‘Allahu akbar’!”
This is an Islamic phrase, meaning “God is greatest.”
“Jesus is Lord!” Sunday replied.
Those were his last words before they beat him to death.
Christians in Oshogbo were enraged. They threatened to retaliate with violence
against the Muslim population. Oshogbo was home to the Grand Mosque,
located at the center of the city. The situation was as dangerous as a candle
burning in a pool of gasoline. My team had cleared a large field on the edge of
the city, far from the mosque. Oshogbo had a soccer stadium near the city center
that seated ten thousand people, but we had rejected it. Even if we had filled the
playing field and the stands to standing room only, it would have accommodated
only a fraction of the crowds of people who had been attending our crusades in
Nigeria. Such a crowd, if aroused to violence, would have jeopardized all the
momentum of the supernatural harvest we had just experienced in Nigeria. This
very thing had happened before.
Ever in my memory was the crusade of October 1991, in Kano, Nigeria. Our
coming to the city had sparked violence from the Muslims living there, as well.
Our team had been forced to flee the city, seeing dead bodies and wreckage in
the streets as they fled. Muslim mobs ruled the day, and Christians were being
killed on sight. Hundreds died.
The rumor mill blamed us for that mayhem. For most people, alas, perception is
reality. They believed what they read in the newspapers, and the word-of-mouth
gossip spread. “Bonnke brought violence to Kano; how can he claim to serve the
Prince of Peace?” Our supposed culpability became our reputation, even though
an extensive investigation was conducted, after which the local governor issued
a report exonerating us of all blame. Nevertheless, Christ for All Nations was
banned from Nigeria for nearly a decade. At the time, it appeared that Satan had
won the day and that Jesus had been forced to retreat.
Through an incredible journey of faith and miracles, all of which are
documented in my autobiography, Living a Life of Fire, we had been invited
back into the country in 1999. The explosion of positive response at our return
was beyond anything that could have been planned or anticipated. What Satan
had meant for evil, God turned into an absolutely unprecedented harvest. The
crusades we held in 2000, and those that followed in 2001, made us a household
name in this nation of 140 million souls.
“HE’S BREATHING!”
Sunday morning, December 2, 2001, began with a ride to the airport. A charter
plane was waiting on the tarmac to fly me to Onitsha, where I was to preach at
the dedication of Grace Cathedral, a ten-thousand-seat church newly built by
Pastor Paul C. NwaChukwu. It is rare that I agree to participate in the dedication
of a church building. My policy has been to say no. Once I start down the road
of accepting such invitations, there will be a flood of requests, and not enough of
me to go around.
In this case, I made an exception. I felt a special bond with Pastor Paul because
of the crusade meetings we had held in Onitsha six months earlier. He had been a
prime force in organizing the cooperation of local churches and pastors there.
When we hold an outreach in a city, we schedule meetings with local churches,
pastors, and believers in something we call a Fire Conference. We train them in
time-tested methods of evangelism. We show them how to document and later
follow up with those who make a decision to accept Christ as Savior during the
campaign. Through the Fire Conference, we connect new converts with local
believers who can disciple them after we leave. We also inspire the local
believers to become evangelists who are bold in their witness, leading others into
a relationship with the Father. The Fire Conference is the heart and soul of our
outreach efforts.
In the spring of 2001, we held the Onitsha Fire Conference and outreach
campaign. Onitsha is a city of little more than one million people, but we had
800,000 in attendance in a single service during the crusade meetings there. This
meant that we needed our Fire Conference follow-up trainees more than ever.
Beyond that, an amazing record had been set here—not in attendance in
responses. An astonishing 86 percent of those who attended the Onitsha
meetings responded to the call for salvation. Never in all my life had I seen such
rich soil for the gospel. Never in my crusades had I witnessed a higher
percentage of sinners coming to Jesus. This is a thrill perhaps equal to that of
preaching to 1.6 million people in Lagos in 2000. An evangelist lives for the day
when everyone in his audience is without Christ. He longs for the meeting in
which all who hear the gospel receive Christ. I have seen such things in my
dreams, but in Onitsha, I came close to realizing it. Eighty-six percent received
Jesus. Hallelujah!
Pastor Paul Nwachukwu had promised me that at the dedication of Grace
Cathedral, a local team of nearly one thousand young evangelists would be
present. They had been members of his congregation, recruited as a result of our
Fire Conference training. I would be invited to lay hands on them and pray for
an impartation of the spirit of evangelism into their lives. What an incentive. Not
only would I be cutting the ribbon for a structure of bricks and mortar, but also—
even better—I would be ministering to flesh-and-blood men and women who
were burning with the same zeal that I knew. Nothing could have pleased me
more than to see the fruit of our harvest in Onitsha multiply through the lives of
these soulwinners. For all of these reasons, Pastor Paul had remained dear to my
heart, and I made an exception to my policy of not attending church dedications.
WISE AS A SERPENT
I agreed to come to Onitsha under one condition: immediately afterward, I
would be flown to Oshogbo, where Sunday Aranziola had died. Events there
were of utmost importance. The Muslim governor of Osun State had sent me a
special invitation to meet with him, and I was anxious to do so. I wanted to learn
the reasons for his belief that our meetings would avert bloodshed. In such face-
to-face encounters with political leaders, I am able to assert that Christ is the
King of Kings, Lord of Lords, and Prince of Peace. They hear from me that the
name of Jesus is the only name under heaven by which we must be saved. (See
Acts 4:12.) Whether the leader is Muslim, Hindu, animist, or atheist, my
message does not vary.
I also knew that, as governor, this man was privy to a great deal of information
from police and other sources about the situation in Oshogbo. Our team wanted
to be informed so that we could cooperate with the authorities in every possible
way. In addition, I would invite the governor to join me on the platform at our
meetings. If he was amenable, I would have him make public remarks to the
people. I believed that a demonstration of solidarity between the Muslim
governor and myself would help calm the waters, still turbulent in the wake of
the murder of Sunday Aranziola.
After meeting with the governor, I planned to meet with Sunday’s grieving
parents. I wanted to share their pain and tears. I wanted to tell them of my great
admiration for their son. I felt completely humbled and sobered by the full
measure of his sacrifice for Jesus. I believed that a great harvest in Oshogbo was
ready to spring up from the seed of his martyrdom, and I wanted to share that
promise with them.
HARMLESS AS A DOVE
As I boarded my flight for Onitsha, I was told about a host of news reporters
gathering in Oshogbo to meet me. I was not sure what to do about them. In the
aftermath of 9/11, news of Sunday’s death had caught the attention of the major
news organizations in Europe, as well as Nigeria. Now they were flocking to
Oshogbo, hoping to arrive in advance of any bloodshed so they could exploit it
in the press. I was told that reporters were seeking to interview me. I am not
flattered by such attention. I do not often grant interviews, knowing that many
reporters are only marginally interested in the truth. Most are seeking sensational
headlines that will discredit our ministry back home. I had made no prior
agreements with them, and I decided that I would address media requests on a
case-by-case basis. I would cooperate only if their intentions seemed honorable,
and then only if my ministry schedule would allow it.
Upon landing in Onitsha, I was met by deacons from the church and by
government security forces carrying AK-47 rifles. The security chief approached
me and said he was under orders from President Olusegun Obasanjo to see that
no harm came my way while I was in Onitsha. He assured me that he had men at
the church who were carefully screening the crowd of people who had gathered
for the dedication. As I entered the car the church had provided for me, the
security men entered vans and mounted motorcycles. Our escorted motorcade
then made its way from the airport to the church.
The potential for Christian and Muslim violence wherever I went was of great
concern to Nigeria’s political leaders in 2001. The rulers, from President
Obasanjo on down, had pledged to protect me. I found security forces waiting to
escort me at every stop. Some of these measures were, of course, merely for the
sake of practicality. The elected officials had never seen crowds nearly as large
as those drawn by a Christ for All Nations crusade. These crowds represented a
bloc of voters they did not wish to offend. In that regard, they were determined
not to see a repeat of the violence in Kano.
In this, I was merely grateful for their concern. I steered clear of endorsing any
politician or political party, except to publicly thank all of the authorities for
their efforts to promote a peaceful meeting. As for President Obasanjo, I had
ministered to him in private, years before he came to power. One of the first acts
of his new administration in 1999 was to lift the ban on Christ for All Nations in
Nigeria. He had been primarily responsible for our return there.
DIVINE DISTURBANCE
Suddenly there came a loud banging on the opposite door. It was the door that
led to the rear section of the building, where the offices were housed, and it was
secured on the outside with heavy locks. The knocking was so loud and forceful,
John Darku grew fearful. He thought that perhaps thieves had broken through
the security forces and had come to rob us.
I went to the door and demanded, “Who is there? What do you want?”
“He’s breathing! He’s breathing! He’s breathing!”
“What do you mean, ‘he’s breathing’? We all breathe. Who is breathing?”
“He’s breathing.”
The commotion died down, but I could hear excited voices outside, as people
crowded into the hallway. I decided not to unlock the door unless Pastor Paul
returned and decided to do it. Outside the door, a certain amount of chaos was in
motion. Crowd control under such circumstances is a serious matter.
Pastor Paul returned. “The story is that a woman brought the corpse of her
husband into the basement of the church,” he explained. “She believed he would
be raised from the dead, if only she could bring him here where you were
preaching. He was dead for three days. They say now he is breathing.”
I was nearly dumbstruck. “That’s what they were saying—‘he’s breathing.’ I
should see this for myself.”
“No, please,” Pastor Paul insisted. “The crowd is flooding into the basement.
They are running here from surrounding neighborhoods. The word is spreading
like wildfire. They say Bonnke’s anointing has brought this to pass. They believe
the anointing remains in the clothes you wear, and they would tear them to
pieces just to have a thread of them.”
“But I did nothing. I did not even pray for the man.”
“Yes, I know. But you should get into the car now. I will quickly check on
things in the sanctuary and give you a report. I dare not go into the basement.
But if you don’t leave now, you might not get to Oshogbo.”
“Very well,” I said.
John and I went out the door, and the security officers opened the doors to our
car and then shut us inside. We could see crowds of excited people running
toward the building. Others began to crowd around our car, but the security
officers kept them away. Soon, Pastor Paul came out and joined us, and our
driver quickly moved away from the building, along with the other vehicles.
“The dead man’s father is in the sanctuary,” said Pastor Paul. “He stood up and
said to me, ‘It is true. My son was dead and is now breathing.’ But he said, ‘His
body is still as stiff as iron.’ My staff is with the man in the basement, and they
will keep a close watch on this situation. I will sort it out when I come back.”
“Something surely happened here,” I said. “But was it a hoax, or real?”
Paul replied, “Exactly.”
As we drove away, I used my satellite cell phone and dialed the number of
Robert Murphree, our film producer from Orlando. He had come with us to
Nigeria and was preparing to interview people who had experienced miracles in
our past crusades. I told him about what had just happened in Onitsha. “I think
this is too important to ignore,” I said. “You should come here and bring your
camera crew, now. Investigate this story and report back to me. If it is not rock
solid, then we will let it go. But if it is true, then the most outstanding miracle I
have ever known just took place.”
Robert replied, “I have scheduled other interviews. How soon do you want me
to come?”
“Immediately,” I said. “The people are still here at Grace Cathedral as we
speak. We should not let them disappear. Come meet with Pastor Paul’s staff.
They will connect you to this story. I will go on to Oshogbo, and then I will get
your full report when you have had some time to check it out. Take as much time
as you need.”
We arrived at the airport, and as we walked toward the airplane, the police chief
in charge of our security approached me. That morning, when we had first met
on the tarmac, he had appeared to be strong and self-assured. Now, he looked
disturbed. He was trembling, and his voice shook as he spoke. “Pastor Bonnke?”
“Yes? What can I do for you?”
“Sir, I am a Muslim. I have never seen such a thing. When they brought the
corpse to the church, it was in a coffin. I made them take the body out of the
coffin so that I could inspect it for explosives. The body was stiff with rigor
mortis. I pulled wads of cotton out of the man’s nostrils. They took him into the
basement, and now he is breathing. Pastor Bonnke, I’ve seen him. The man who
was dead is breathing.”
This Muslim policeman removed his dark glasses and looked at me with
wonder in his eyes. What he had seen had rocked him to the core. Surely, his
view of Jesus as a mere prophet had been changed forever. We declare Christ to
be the very Son of God, and here was a sign to confirm that message. Looking at
him, it began to dawn on me that this thing had really happened. My television
crew was about to record the story of their lives.
HEARTS REVEALED
WOUNDED HEARTS
Before proceeding, however, we should clear up the misconception that men are
the only perpetrators of domestic violence. While it is statistically true that
among married couples, men exhibit violence more often than women. in this
case, Daniel did not strike his wife. She struck him.
Once again, I sense thoughts such as, Well, if she struck him, he certainly must
have done something to deserve it! I have to chuckle, because only God would
choose to demonstrate His resurrection power in such a volatile circumstance.
There is simply no politically correct way to deal with it.
But it seems to me that the very circumstance itself reveals more than the
failings of Daniel and Nneka. It uncovers pride and prejudice deeply rooted in
our own thinking. As we feel the urge to reject this couple and their entire story
because of this detail, we demand that God dance to our tune. But if this miracle
indeed took place, then we must deal with the fact that it did not happen under
circumstances of which we would approve. But God’s ways are high above ours,
and I begin to see where this story is leading. No one is going to be left
untouched by the love, mercy, and grace of God—not even a couple deep in
marital trouble.
By this messy detail, we are pushed out of our comfort zones. But we are also
pushed to examine our own hearts. And so should we, because God’s love comes
alive only for those who have been made aware of their utter need for Him.
Scripture tells us that Jesus did not come to seek the righteous but to save
sinners. (See Mark 2:17; Luke 5:32.) We had not repented, had not yet asked for
forgiveness, had not reformed our behavior; and yet, while we were still in our
sins, He died for us and removed the penalty we deserved. He came as the Good
Shepherd, the One who left the flock to find the one lost sheep.
In the Gospels, we read that Jesus was criticized for spending time with people
who did not even pretend to be religious. Some were notorious sinners, like the
scandalous woman who washed His feet with her tears and dried them with her
hair in the home of a self-righteous Pharisee. In these biblical scenes, again and
again, the love of our Lord for broken humanity is revealed. How quickly we
forget.
A GUILTY HEART
When I think about the fact that Nneka slapped her husband, I ask, “What
would Jesus do?” Then I remember that at the well in Samaria, Jesus seemed to
delight in talking to a notoriously sinful woman. She was openly living in sin
after failing to find domestic tranquility with husband after husband after
husband—five in all. She was not an orthodox Jew but a heretic, a Samaritan,
following a mixed-up, pagan version of Scripture. But none of this was a barrier
to His offer of a drink from the fountain of living water.
In fact, just the opposite. Jesus’ door was wide open. “But the hour cometh, and
now is,” He said to her, “when the true worshippers shall worship the Father in
spirit and in truth: for the Father seeketh such to worship him” (John 4:23). This
woman was being sought by the God of the universe. Her sin did not disqualify
her to have a relationship with Him or to receive eternal life. And from these
Scriptures, I can confidently say that Daniel’s wife was not disqualified to
receive anything in God’s heart by her act of domestic violence.
I do not mean to downplay the seriousness of the offense. Quite the opposite. I
am a realistic man. Through our marriage, my wife, Anni, and I have become
one flesh before the Lord. But we are not of one mind. Our disagreements have
had the potential to be as destructive as Daniel and Nneka’s. By God’s grace, we
have been able to avoid that. However, I have had Christian married couples
confess such failures to me during private sessions of tearful anguish. In the heat
of disagreement, one partner or the other has lashed out physically, breaking the
covenant of marriage in a moment of violent anger. In these sessions, one can
sense how the fabric of love has been torn. Affections are wrenched with bitter
disappointment and betrayal. The loose ends of the union are raw and bleeding.
In such devastation, the enemy pours in his pernicious seed, and invisible scars
form that can harden the heart beyond forgiveness.
A HARDENED HEART
In fact, that is what had happened to Daniel. In his mind, he said, She has
committed an abomination. The more he thought about it, the more fiercely his
anger burned. She was so wrong; and, by contrast, he felt so right. Abomination
is a religious word applied to horrible sins—awful sins; things considered
“beyond the pale.” But we must stop to ask ourselves, Does God see any sin
beyond the pale? May it never be! His sacrifice was sufficient to forgive every
sin. Only one sin is unforgiveable, and that is blasphemy against the Holy Spirit.
(See Matthew 12:31; Mark 3:29.) Nneka did not commit that unforgiveable sin
when she slapped her husband in a show of disrespect. Whether her sin could be
considered an abomination had nothing to do with the love of God. It was
Daniel’s pride that took the word abomination and created a barrier to
forgiveness—a grudge that he would hold against her.
Daniel was a preacher of the gospel, a respected leader, and pastor of Power
Chapel Evangelical Church in Onitsha. He should have known better. By
denying forgiveness to Nneka, he committed a far greater sin than domestic
violence. He would have done well to embrace the words of the apostle Paul,
who urged us, “And be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one
another, even as God for Christ’s sake hath forgiven you” (Ephesians 4:32).
Instead, Daniel hardened his heart.
A CLASSIC CONFLICT
This is the point in the story that inquiring minds want to know: the nature of
the disagreement between Daniel and Nneka. What was it that sparked their
heated argument? What prompted the slap and the resulting estrangement? In
fact, it was a classic quarrel over the tensions that arise between the ofttimes
conflicting obligation of a man to his family and to his career. In this particular
case, the issue was Daniel’s sense of calling to the work of the Lord. At the time
of his incident, Daniel and Nneka had two sons, ages two and four, and she was
pregnant with their third child.
Months earlier, he had scheduled a gospel crusade in a village some three hours
away. The meetings would require him to preach from Monday through
Wednesday. As he was preparing to leave, his youngest son had become ill. They
had taken him to the local Catholic facility, St. Charles Borromeo Hospital,
where the doctor had informed them that the boy needed minor surgery, and that
a matching blood donor would be necessary before they could perform the
procedure. Daniel had promptly allowed them to draw blood from his own veins.
Then, after charging his staff at Power Chapel Church with looking after
Nneka’s need for transportation and helping with the children, he had left to
conduct his meetings.
Nneka had felt deserted at a time when she especially needed her husband, and
as she was shuttled back and forth between home and the hospital, her feelings
of abandonment grew. She cried herself to sleep each night, until one evening
when she received a promise—a moment of peace from the Lord. Something
bright and beautiful came directly into her spirit. It was a vision of fruitful and
fulfilling years with her husband. They were hand in hand, serving the Lord as
one. It was not a vision perceptible to the natural eye, but it was so real that she
could see their future together, glowing like a candle in the darkness. She
embraced the promise and held it in the night, soon falling into a deep and restful
sleep.
On Thursday evening, Daniel returned home. Nneka wanted to tell him about
the promise, but he seemed distant. Her fears arose, and she was troubled. He
asked her why she was not happy. Instead of telling him about the promise she
had received, she explained her displeasure that he had left during a family crisis
and had not come home even to check on her or the children. She told him that it
felt like he was married to someone else, not her. He reacted by shouting, “What
more do you expect from me? I paid for the doctors, I gave blood for the
procedure, then I went to do the work of the Lord. What do you want? I have—”
It was at this point that Nneka slapped him. He was not finished defending his
actions, but her slap ended his words. He walked away deeply offended. To his
credit, he did not strike back, at least not physically. But in Nigeria, a woman is
never allowed to slap her husband. In earlier generations, such an action could
have resulted in her death. Daniel knew that no one would defend her if he made
known what she had done. She had placed great power in his hands. She had no
grounds on which to stand in the conflict. He held all the cards, and now he had
to decide how best to play them out.
THE WAYS OF DEATH
Daniel went to his bedroom, removed Nneka’s belongings, and announced that
she would be sleeping in the guest room. Then he shut and locked the bedroom
door. But he was unable to rest. His mind went round and round with the terrible
offense he had suffered. The insult and disrespect could not be ignored.
Near midnight, he heard a tapping at the door. Nneka called through the latch,
“My darling, please forgive me. I am so sorry. It was not me who slapped you. I
don’t know what came over me. It was the devil, I think.”
He answered back, “Yes, it was the devil. And now that the devil has used you,
he is through with you. But I am not through with you. Go away until I have
decided what is to be done.”
Before the night had passed, the answer came to him. He knew that Nneka
loved him greatly. The distress that had led to her misbehavior had come from
her being separated from him during the recent crusade. The perfect punishment,
therefore, would be to send her away for an entire year. That would fit the crime
and teach her to control her disrespectful outbursts in the future. With that
resolve, he developed a plan to banish her to his father’s house in the village of
Amaimo, some seventy miles away.
In the morning, he dressed and left the house. As he passed by, Nneka
approached him again with a cheery greeting, seeking to make amends. She had
prepared breakfast for him and obviously wanted to apologize. He ignored her
and walked to his car.
You will notice that this punishment is not what Scripture would recommend.
There is nothing in the New Testament that would encourage Daniel to do
anything but embrace his wife’s apology and forgive her. But this man of God
was acting according to his own plan. He was doing what he believed was right
in his own eyes. When speaking about it years later, he would often quote
Proverbs 16:25: “There is a way that seemeth right unto a man, but the end
thereof are the ways of death.”
4
THE ACCIDENT
A SMOKING FLAX
Mr. Ikugpe’s compromised religion resembled that of the Samaritans of Jesus’
day (see John 4:7–22), that of the Jews who asked Aaron to give them a golden
calf to worship at Mount Sinai (see Exodus 3:1–10), or that of the Galatian
church of Paul’s day, to whom he wrote, “O foolish Galatians, who hath
bewitched you, that ye should not obey the truth, before whose eyes Jesus Christ
hath been evidently set forth, crucified among you?” (Galatians 3:1). As an
evangelist, I can really feel the apostle’s frustration expressed in this passage—a
frustration shared by many who have sown the seed of God’s Word among tribal
cultures. Those would include the twelve tribes of Israel, the barbarian Gauls
known as Galatians, the many Celtic tribes of Europe, and the tribal roots that
thrive in many parts of Africa today. In the United States, the Native American
culture presents a constant challenge to the missionaries who labor among the
various tribes.
The point I want to emphasize here is God’s love for these people. Many
missionaries and evangelists, including the apostle Paul and me, may have
reached our wits’ end, but God has never shared our frustration. He is long-
suffering and infinitely patient, “not willing that any should perish, but that all
should come to repentance” (2 Peter 3:9). He demonstrates amazing tenderness
toward the “smoking flax” of tribal spirituality. (See Isaiah 42:3.) His gospel is
as powerful to change a life in Africa as it is to change a life in the halls of
enlightened idolatry at Oxford, Harvard, Princeton, or Union Theological
Seminary—if not more so.
Often, in our mass crusades in Africa, there will be a night during which great
bonfires burn. The people joyfully throw their idols, fetishes, and ritual books
into the flames. They dance with freedom as they embrace the salvation that
comes by grace through faith—plus nothing else!
In the story of Daniel Ekechukwu’s resurrection, as it relates to the paganism of
his extended family, I have seen the amazing love and patience of God
demonstrated in the most tender ways. And that surprising tenderness is what I
share with you in this book. Too often, we see God as ready to punish, ready to
let the hammer of judgment fall on those in error. In truth, He stands at the door
knocking, as He did with the Laodicean church in the book of Revelation. (See
Revelation 3:20.) He is surprisingly near, ready to share His love feast with
anyone who will open the door to Him.
Daniel’s extended family, like many other families in Africa, had long struggled
in a tug-of-war between the truth of the gospel and their old, familiar ways of
tribal religion. Missionaries had come to Africa in the colonial era and had
spread Christianity like the seed described in Jesus’ parable of the sower. (See
Matthew 13:3–9; Mark 4:3–9; Luke 8:5–8.) Some seeds fell on hard-packed
earth, and birds ate it before it could grow. Other seeds fell on shallow ground
and sprang up quickly, but then they died just quickly, because they had no depth
of root. Some seeds fell among thorns and were choked. Other seeds fell in good
soil and bore good fruit. It would seem that Daniel’s father was an example of
the seed sown among thorns. In time, the Word was choked by other cares, and
he had backslidden into a mixture of paganism and Christianity.
BLOOD FEUD
Tribal values run deeper in rural places, such as Amaimo, than in cities like
Onitsha. For village dwellers, respect of one’s elders stands as the pinnacle of
pagan virtues. It extends, at the far extreme, to ancestor worship. Even though
Daniel felt that he could differ with his father while still respecting him, some of
his half brothers did not share this view. During a family visit some months
earlier, they had overheard their father silencing Daniel with the same words he
had used so many times: “I was preaching from this Book before you were born.
Don’t tell me what is right or wrong.” To them, it sounded like Daniel had
shown disrespect to the family patriarch. This was considered an abomination.
Further inflaming their anger, Daniel’s mother had been Mr. Ikugpe’s first wife,
and she continued to hold a place of privilege over the other wives. In addition,
she had given Daniel unfair advantages over the other children, not unlike
Abraham’s wife, Sarah, and her treatment of Ishmael. (See Genesis 21:1–11.)
The resulting tension gave way to violence when Daniel’s half brothers decided
that Daniel needed to be taught a lesson.
When he visited the family compound, several of them attacked him, one so
viciously that he was imprisoned by the police for attempted murder. As a result
of the injuries he sustained in the attack, Daniel was taken to Umezuruike
Hospital in Owerri. His recovery took days, and the wounds left scars on his
face.
His extended family was still in turmoil over that violent episode on the Friday
morning when Daniel decided to do something dramatic and heroic to calm the
storm.
THE BRIBE
After shunning Nneka, Daniel decided to offer a peace offering to his father.
Christmas was approaching, a season when he usually managed to exert a great
deal of influence in the family with traditional gifts to celebrate the birth of
Christ. With that in mind, he took a friend—a young man from his church—and
drove his twenty-year-old Mercedes-Benz to pick up a prized goat. As is
common in Nigeria, he loaded the goat into the backseat of the car and tethered
it there.
This goat would be a special gift to his father, to be served as the main course at
a family Christmas feast. He would also tell his father that he would put up the
bail money so that his brother who was still in prison could attend, as well. He
hoped this would be a powerful gesture of reconciliation, one that would rebuild
the bridge of welcome to his extended family in Amaimo. He also hoped it
would also pave the way for his banishment of Nneka.
It is easy to see that Daniel was contradicting himself—on the one hand seeking
reconciliation with those who had persecuted him, while simultaneously seething
in unforgiveness toward his wife. Hypocritical or not, his plan seemed to work.
At the family compound in Amaimo, his father was so blessed by the gesture of
the goat that he knelt down in the dirt and thanked God for his wonderful son.
Daniel then gave both his father and his mother large gifts of money, after which
he announced the sad news that Nneka had slapped him, then shared his plan to
banish her to their compound for a year.
His mother made herself the champion of his cause by asserting without
hesitation that he should do it. Plans were made for Daniel to bring Nneka to
Amaimo for a visit on the following Sunday. When it came time to leave, he
would inform her and the children that they would be staying with Grandpa and
Grandma at the village. In a private session with Nneka, he would explain that
this was to be her punishment for striking him, and that it would last a full year.
A DANGEROUS ROAD
With his primary mission accomplished, Daniel told his father that he would
return with rice and vegetables to complete the Christmas feast, then he left to
drive the seventy miles from Amaimo back to Onitsha, with his friend as
passenger. As he came into his own neighborhood, he drove down a familiar
steep gully.
It is important for those who have never driven in Africa to understand that
even city streets and neighborhoods have very little asphalt paving. Except for
the main arteries, nearly all the streets are dirt, and therefore subject to terrible
erosion during the rainy seasons. Even a familiar lane can develop potholes that
can nearly swallow a car. City street crews feel little obligation to fix these
hazards, except in the areas of high traffic or perhaps in high-income
neighborhoods, where those with political influence reside.
Daniel recalls passing, perhaps unwisely, a freight truck at the crest of the hill,
which caused him to gain more speed than normal entering the gully. As he
descended, he tried to brake but found that his brake pedal went to the
floorboard, with no effect. He pumped it again and again, only to find his car out
of control.
The car smashed head-on into a cement abutment that was designed to restrain
cars from tumbling into the ravine below. Because Daniel wore no seatbelt, he
was slammed against the steering wheel with great force. The impact threw his
friend against the windshield on the opposite side of the car. He was injured but,
miraculously, was not badly hurt. He looked across the car at Daniel and was
aghast. The impact of the steering column against Daniel’s chest had caused
severe internal damage. He was bleeding from the nose and barely conscious.
Soon, he began vomiting copious amounts of blood.
Daniel’s memory is still unclear on the details of the accident, but he does recall
hearing the sounds of the crowd that quickly gathered on the scene. Arms were
pulling him from the smashed car and laying him on the ground. He heard
conversations from bystanders describing his injuries as he continued to vomit
blood from internal bleeding. He heard the voice of a woman volunteering her
husband’s car to be used as an ambulance to drive him to a local hospital.
A familiar face appeared above him, though, to this day, he is not sure who it
was. Next, someone was running from the scene, crying loudly, and with great
anguish, “Pastor Daniel! Pastor Daniel!”
5
NNEKA’S NIGHTMARE
Back in Onitsha, Nneka tried to find peace. She spent the day talking to God
and reminding Him of a promise He had given her after Daniel had been
viciously attacked by his family members. During his recovery in Umezuruike
Hospital in Owerri, she had agonized over the terrible violence of his half
brothers. In prayer, she had received a special assurance in her heart after
reading these words from Isaiah: “The sons also of them that afflicted thee shall
come bending unto thee; and all they that despised thee shall bow themselves
down at the soles of thy feet; and they shall call thee, The City of the Lord, The
Zion of the Holy One of Israel” (Isaiah 60:14).
Even though Nneka knew this Scripture had been written as a prophecy to
Israel, she received the words as her own. They fit her painful situation and
seemed to promise her that what Daniel’s family had meant for evil, God would
turn to an even greater good. (See Genesis 50:20.) In her heart, Nneka believed
the Lord was speaking the word of Isaiah to her, promising her that she would
not experience another violation. Her home would be called “The City of the
Lord.”
As she went about her housework that day, she declared her home to be the City
of the Lord. She reminded God of His promise in Isaiah. She also asked Him
what could be the meaning of the conflict between her and Daniel. To her further
frustration, her husband had gone to make peace in his father’s home—the very
place where he had been so savagely beaten. In her relationship with God, she
felt that she had the right to hold Him to the promise He had given her. But she
was conflicted by the unforgiveness that remained in her marriage. In prayer, she
asked, “What is this violation of my home? Why is it happening again? I hold
You to Your promise, Lord. My home is the City of the Lord.” But in that
moment, the City of the Lord was coming under siege. A storm of evil was
racing toward Nneka, one that would nearly capsize her faith.
She went to the kitchen and had begun preparing the evening meal when she
heard through the open window the anguished cries of a young man running
toward the house. Something about the sound of his voice grabbed her heart with
the knowledge that something had happened to Daniel. She recognized the man
as Kingsley Iruka, a neighbor who was also a friend from church. As he ran, he
shouted, “It’s Pastor Daniel! He’s had a car accident. He’s bleeding oh so
badly!”
ANOTHER VIOLATION
As soon as Nneka heard these words from the street, her body gave out. She fell
to the floor in a dead faint. This is a telling detail, I think. The stress that she was
under must have been great. She felt the guilt of her action against her husband,
for which she had twice tried to apologize. She also felt the added weight of his
rejection. In addition to her prayers, her mind was wrestling with all kinds of
negative self-talk, some true and some false. Her thoughts accused her one
minute and blamed her husband in the next. Round and round the mental storm
raged. Beyond all of this, she also was several months pregnant.
In times of distress, the flesh wants to become very active. We see this at work
in the disciples as they crossed the stormy sea with Jesus asleep in the boat. In
their desperation, they lost their belief that He cared for them. Their thoughts
plunged them into a sea of doubt, and when they awakened the Master, He
rebuked them for their lack of faith. (See Mark 4:35–41; Luke 8:22–25.) So it
was for Nneka, left to her own thoughts for so long. Meanwhile, in her spirit, the
love of God cried out against the nature of the quarrel. The heart of Christ bears
no room for unforgiveness. Now, suddenly, the news that Daniel had suffered an
accident drove her emotions beyond anything her body could endure, and she
simply collapsed.
Concerned neighbors entered the home and found her unconscious on the floor.
With cool water, they helped her recover. As soon as she was aware of her
surroundings, her thoughts drove her to action again. She got to her feet, asked
the neighbors to look after the children, and then followed Kingsley at a run
back to the crash site.
At the sight of the wrecked Mercedes-Benz, her fears increased. She saw a lot
of blood on the ground, but there was no sign of Daniel. Frantic, she questioned
those at the scene, who told her that some bystanders had borrowed a car to take
him to a hospital—St. Charles Borromeo Hospital, on the edge of the city. She
knew the hospital well, for it was there that her son had received treatment for a
recent illness. It was many miles away—too far to walk. And who would drive
her? Even in a large city like Onitsha, automobiles are expensive. The cost of
gasoline can be a large portion of a person’s total income. It is never assumed
that on a moment’s notice, a car will be available for an emergency. Nearly
beside herself with worry, Nneka returned to her house.
Kingsley tried to calm her fears and reassure her. He promised to find someone
to drive her to the hospital.
A DEATH CERTIFICATE
Arriving at the clinic, they found Mr. Emmanuel’s doctor, Dr. Josse
Anuebunwa, on duty. At last, Daniel’s body was moved from the ambulance to
an examination room. With Nneka, Kingsley, and Mr. Emmanuel standing by,
Dr. Anuebunwa listened with his stethoscope for a heartbeat and found none. He
felt for a pulse. Nothing stirred. He listened for lung function and heard nothing.
Finally, he took his examining flashlight and forced Daniel’s eyelids open. His
gaze was fixed, his pupils dilated. In seventeen years of practice, Dr. Anuebunwa
had seen enough death to recognize the signs.
“Your husband is dead, Nneka,” he said. “I’m sorry. There is nothing more to
do.”
She sank to the floor, weeping in helpless anguish, feeling alone and betrayed—
betrayed by God, by her husband, by her own actions, and by the evil
circumstances of the accident. In that moment, however, she was left with
something else. Something even deeper inside her refused to be extinguished by
the relentless attack of death and destruction. It was the flicker of the promise
she had received in the night, fanned to flame by the Scripture from Isaiah,
telling her that her home would be called the City of the Lord. Could there be
anything to it, now that Daniel was dead? Perhaps it provided something she
could yet hold on to. But how? As Dr. Anuebunwa began filling out a death
certificate, she stared numbly at the paper.
Daniel was declared dead on Friday, November 30, 2001, at 11:30 p.m., at St.
Eunice’s Clinic in Owerri. The certificate detailed the examination results and
listed the factors that had pointed to the conclusion of “demise.” At the bottom
of the certificate, the doctor wrote out his recommendation: “For removal to
mortuary.” Placing the full weight of his professional reputation on the line, he
sealed the document with his signature.
6
NNEKA’S HOPE
According to tribal custom, as soon as Daniel was dead, his body no longer
belonged to Nneka; it belonged to his father, Lawrence Ekechukwu Ikugpe.
Before taking the body to the mortuary, she felt obligated to take it to Daniel’s
home village, to his father’s house, which was only ten miles away. She felt
helpless to do anything more. So, the ambulance became a hearse, transporting
the body to Amaimo.
The village was nowhere near a main road. In fact, the final miles of the journey
there were no more than a trail. The people who live in this region travel by foot.
Some have oxen and carts, most have access to a bicycle, and a few have
motorized scooters. Automobiles are the rare exception, and the road system
reflects that fact. A hundred yards from the family compound itself, the
ambulance was forced to stop at an open sewer, and the final distance had to be
covered on foot. They arrived just after midnight. Nneka asked the nurse to open
the rear doors of the ambulance. She remained there with the body as Kingsley
went to find Daniel’s father.
At the house, Kingsley called through the windows to awaken Mr. Ikugpe from
sleep. In the Niger Delta region, houses have doorways but no doors; windows,
but no glass. Curtains suffice, yet even those are considered a luxury.
Temperatures in the tropical climate are comfortable, fluctuating between
seventy and eighty degrees Fahrenheit, day and night. As Kingsley called out for
Mr. Ikugpe, other family members were awakened. They came out of their
houses and gathered in the common area near the main house.
At last, the patriarch of the clan hobbled into the yard, steadying himself with
his cane. He immediately sensed that something was wrong. Kingsley told the
shocking story of the accident and Daniel’s subsequent death. The old man took
it in, not sure he had heard correctly. Some of the others began to wail.
Mr. Ikugpe seemed in a daze as Kingsley led him back to the ambulance,
lighting his way with a flashlight. At the vehicle, Nneka began to weep silently
when she saw the old man. She knew well that Daniel’s father had also been his
spiritual adversary for many years. It was unthinkable to her that a representative
of the true faith should be brought so low before a witch doctor. But what could
she do?
She guided Daniel’s father inside the ambulance to see his son’s body. He
reached out and felt the cold skin. Rigor mortis was already setting into the
limbs. In the glow of the dome light inside the ambulance, his face appeared
placid. It was then that the reality hit him, and he knew that this was the same
son who had visited that very morning. Having accepted the death, he began to
weep and cry aloud, while the rest of Daniel’s extended family gathered around
and joined in the chorus of agony.
Soon the entire neighborhood had awakened, and people came running from
every direction to see what was causing the disturbance. As curiosity seekers
pressed in all around the ambulance, Mr. Ikugpe suggested that he and Nneka
take the body to the local mortuary for the night. It was only a mile from the
family compound. And so, the ambulance was employed as a hearse yet again.
AT THE MORTUARY
The Ikeduru General Hospital Mortuary existed in a primitive village, much
like the family compound at Amaimo. The mortician, Mr. Barlington Manu,
lived next to the mortuary, a family business that had been passed down to him
by his father. The mortuary primarily served the hospital in the neighboring
village of Inyishi. Mr. Ikugpe knew Barlington Manu by reputation, having spent
his entire life in the area.
Like most of the residential structures in the region, the mortuary building had
no secure doors or windowpanes. Animals wild or domestic, including rodents,
easily could have accessed the bodies inside, except that the chemical smell
repelled them. Not even a fly could be observed landing inside the building.
Over the generations, the Manu family had never had a corpse molested. Their
livelihood depended on it.
They approached the house of Mr. Manu and called for him at the doorway.
After several minutes, he came out of the house. Mr. Ikugpe explained that his
son had just died and that he had brought him to be embalmed. Apprised of the
situation, Mr. Manu started a gasoline-powered generator that illuminated the
overhead lights in the mortuary for night work. Kingsley and the ambulance
driver assisted him by carrying the stretcher with Daniel’s body into the
building.
There were dozens of other bodies in the mortuary, protected from decay by
formaldehyde injections administered by Mr. Manu. There was no refrigeration,
of course, and this was the time-tested method that preserved bodies in
reasonable condition until the family could collect enough money to host a
proper burial. One body in the building had been awaiting burial for five years.
They removed Daniel’s body from the stretcher and placed it on a slab. Mr.
Manu used a stethoscope to conduct his own examination of the corpse. When
he had verified the validity of the death certificate, he informed Mr. Ikugpe and
Nneka that he would proceed with the embalming process that night. He offered
them his condolences, then added the body to his roster of cadavers. The record,
which exists to this day, notes that Daniel was received on Friday, November 30,
2001. In fact, it was in the early hours of Saturday, December 1, that he arrived;
but in this rural part of Nigeria, no one wears a watch, and so the night belongs
to the previous day. In Mr. Manu’s mind, it would not be Saturday until the sun
came up. Daniel’s father paid him one thousand naira to begin the embalming
process.
DIVINE INTERRUPTION
As Mr. Manu made his first incision in the thigh, he received what felt to him
like a strong electric shock. It knocked him backward with real force. He and his
assistant looked at one another with concern. As practicing animists, they
believed that all physical reality is permeated with spirits of various kinds—
some evil, some benevolent, some neutral. In his work of embalming the dead,
Mr. Manu held the spirit world in high regard, and he was not one to ignore
signals that he was violating a territory held by an invisible host. He knew that
Daniel’s father, Mr. Ikugpe, was a local witch doctor, and he suspected that,
through his father, Daniel had acquired powerful spirits that were interfering
with the procedure. Mr. Manu thought that perhaps Mr. Ikugpe would be able to
perform some ritual that could put an end to this spiritual mischief.
First, though, he decided to try making an incision on the other side of the body,
thinking that perhaps the opposite thigh had not been attached to the same spirit.
Again, the charge of electricity knocked him backward. This time, the signal left
no doubt. His entire arm became numb from the shock, to the extent that he
could not coordinate its movement for the rest of the night. Attempting any
further work on the body would prove futile. He told his assistant that they
would go to Mr. Ikugpe in the morning and ask him to perform some magic to
pacify the invisible entities.
With that, he asked his assistant to help him carry the body into Room #2,
where two other bodies lay on an elevated slab, awaiting embalming. They
hoisted it onto the last available space on the slab, and then Mr. Manu shut off
the generator, watching the lights fade to black. He bid his assistant good night
and returned to his house to resume sleep.
Back in his own bed, he found his wife sleeping soundly. But before he could
close his eyes, Mr. Manu heard the sounds of a gospel choir singing and clapping
in the night. It was a most unusual sound for that hour. He thought that perhaps
the little church his wife attended, which was located several hundred yards
beyond the mortuary, had decided to hold some kind of midnight vigil. He woke
his wife and asked her if the church was meeting. She assured him that it was
not.
He went out into the yard and, to his surprise, found that the singing seemed to
be coming from the mortuary, not from the church beyond it. He shook his head
with disbelief, then went to the door and peeked in. As he did, the singing
stopped. Fear crept up the back of his spine to the base of his skull, causing him
to shiver.
Determining to put it out of his mind, he returned to bed. When he closed his
eyes, the singing resumed. As terrified as he felt, he simply could not ignore it.
He had to identify the source of the singing. He got up again and retraced his
steps across the yard to the mortuary. As he approached the door, the singing
stopped. But he did not stop at the door this time. He entered the dark building,
illuminated only faintly by starlight filtering in through the windows and doors,
and headed for Room #2.
When he looked inside, the sight was unlike anything he had ever seen in all his
years of practice. Daniel’s face was glowing. Tiny points of light emanated from
his skin and returned, as if performing some kind of light-particle dance. Mr.
Manu looked to the window to see if the moon was casting a beam across the
corpse’s face, but the angle was such that the possibility was eliminated. He
looked at the faces of the two other dead bodies on the slab. No such light came
from them. Daniel alone was glowing. This manifestation was beyond Mr.
Manu’s ability to cope. He concluded that the powers at work in Daniel’s body
were too strong for him. He feared they would surely harm him if he attempted
to embalm the body.
ANOTHER PROMISE
Meanwhile, in Amaimo, Nneka was sitting up in bed, reading her Bible by
candlelight. On the page before her was Hebrews chapter 11, a passage famous
for its list of Old Testament heroes of the faith. Suddenly, a phrase from the
chapter nearly leaped off the page: “Women received their dead raised to life
again” (Hebrews 11:35). The words quickened a powerful thought in her mind:
If Old Testament women received their dead raised to life again, why not me?
Daniel was dead. In the natural, there was no hope. But with God, all things
were possible. (See Matthew 19:26; Mark 10:27; Luke 18:27.)
Her mind returned to the intimate moment with God in which she had received
His peace and His promise. A new hope was born in her heart as she reread the
Scripture from Hebrews. She had received a vision of a future with Daniel—the
two of them serving the Lord together as one. That vision would be fulfilled only
if this Scripture somehow became her own—if she became one of those women
who received their dead raised to life again. She embraced her Bible and
squeezed her eyes shut in the flickering candlelight.
“Oh, Father, Father,” she prayed, “let me be one of those women.”
7
NNEKA’S DREAM
On Saturday morning, Mr. Manu and his assistant arrived at Mr. Ikugpe’s
family compound. Nneka came out of the house with Daniel’s father to meet
them in the yard. The mortician placed the 1,000-naira note firmly into the old
man’s hand and then stepped back.
He said, “You must come remove the body from my mortuary at once. I cannot
do my work.”
Mr. Ikugpe replied, “Why can’t you do the work?”
“Please, please,” Mr. Manu said, “I tell you, there are strong forces around the
body. Twice I tried to inject embalming fluid and was knocked back by an
electrical shock. What have you done to make this happen?”
“What do you mean? I have done nothing,” Mr. Ikugpe replied.
Nneka listened to this exchange with great interest.
Mr. Manu continued, “You have made a spell or some powerful witchcraft over
the body. You have attracted bad spirits. They will not let me work.”
“No, no. I have done nothing.”
“Surely you have,” Mr. Manu insisted. “You are a powerful elder who speaks
with the ancestors. In the night, some of them were singing. What was the
singing? I heard singing coming from the mortuary. Clapping and singing.”
At this point, Nneka could not contain her excitement. She suspected that the
body had attracted good spirits, not bad ones. “What kind of singing?” she
asked. “Was it chanting and drumming?” In her mind, this type of noise would
indicate an animist or voodoo ceremony.
“No, no. It was a like the hymns they sing at the church where my wife goes on
Sunday. The church is just over the hedge from the mortuary. I thought they
were singing in the night, but I woke my wife, and she said no. There was no
church service at that hour.”
Hearing this, Nneka was secretly thrilled. The singing of hymns meant to her
that Mr. Manu had heard an angelic choir, and the idea gave her a surge of new
hope.
“The song came from the mortuary,” he continued. “And when I went to inspect
it, the singing stopped. This happened not once but twice. And something more:
I went inside to inspect the body, and Daniel’s face was glowing with light.
Small particles of light were circling in and out of the skin on his face. I have
never seen anything like it in all my years of practice.”
NNEKA’S FAITH
From the moment Mr. Ikugpe got out of bed on Sunday morning, he could not
find a moment’s peace. Nneka was ready and waiting for him. Through the
night, she had become convinced that God was revealing His direction for her.
She began to make her case, and she would not quit.
She told him that he should pay attention to all the signs that God was going to
raise Daniel from the dead at Grace Cathedral: First, God had promised her.
Next, He had prevented Daniel’s body from being embalmed. Then, Mr. Manu
had heard an angelic choir singing in the mortuary and witnessed Daniel’s face
glowing with light. Finally, Daniel had appeared to her in a dream, telling her
that he was not dead and that he wanted her to take him to Grace Cathedral for
the Reinhard Bonnke meeting. She insisted that her dream had been real, and
that it was no coincidence I was preaching in Onitsha that day. It was part of
God’s plan, a divine appointment. They simply had to take Daniel there.
Mr. Ikugpe became more and more convinced that Nneka was mad with grief
and could not be trusted. In his mind, the only thing that could bring her to her
senses would be to see Daniel placed in a casket and buried in the ground.
Secretly, in the early morning hours, he had sent one of Daniel’s half brothers to
the mortuary with enough money to buy a casket. He decided he would have him
buried immediately after his embalming at the St. Eunice’s Clinic Mortuary in
Owerri. He hoped that this would shock Nneka back to reality. He told her to
bring a plain white suit of Daniel’s for burial. He further insisted that she bring
along her older son to the mortuary. His hope was that she would hold her
tongue to keep from upsetting him.
His plan did not work.
The long walk to the mortuary provided more opportunity for Nneka to press
her position, which she did, in spite of the fact that her son heard everything.
When Mr. Ikugpe stood his ground, she began to weep and plead all the more
fervently. He had never faced such resistance to his leadership, and he began to
fear that nothing would bring her to her senses. Her unflagging insistence began
to shake his sense of being in charge of the situation.
When they arrived at the mortuary, he finally agreed to let her take the body to
Grace Cathedral before it was embalmed, thinking that it would put her ideas of
resurrection to rest. Given the way she was acting, he feared that if he didn’t take
that step, he would never hear the end of it as long as he lived—for if Daniel was
dead, he was doomed to house Nneka under his roof for the rest of her days.
ROAR OF A LIONESS
The ambulance was waiting for them at the mortuary. Nneka informed Mr.
Manu that they would be taking Daniel to Grace Cathedral for prayer, and that if
he didn’t rise from the dead, they would come back to Owerri to have the body
embalmed and buried.
Mr. Manu seemed disturbed by this plan. He took Mr. Ikugpe aside and
explained that if the authorities caught them transporting a dead body that had
gone so long without being embalmed, they would arrest them on any number of
charges—abuse of a dead body, or even suspicion of murder. Sometimes, the
police would arrest people on mere suspicion and hold them as a bribe, until bail
was received for their release. Mr. Manu did not want to give the authorities such
an opportunity. In order to avoid accusations of being body snatchers, he
suggested they transport Daniel in his grave clothes inside the coffin. Mr. Ikugpe
assured him that they would bury him in the coffin they had purchased;
therefore, transporting him inside it would be no problem. Nneka understood his
position and agreed to it.
Daniel Ekechukwu, laid out in his coffin.
Mr. Ikugpe made it clear to Nneka that the entire situation offended him deeply,
not to mention violated his tribal obligations. He also informed her that the
responsibility for the situation was on her shoulders alone. Therefore, he made
her pledge that if Daniel did not rise from the dead at Grace Cathedral, she
would cover the burial costs in full.
Nneka readily agreed. In her heart, she never expected to pay a single naira.
By this time, the corpse was very stiff and difficult to dress. His arms and
midsection were so stiff, they could not manage to get the shirt in place. Mr.
Manu slit the back of the shirt with scissors and unbuttoned the front in two
pieces. He put one half over one arm, the other half over the other arm, and
buttoned it up in front. He then tucked the ragged backside under the body. From
the front, everything looked rather neat and tidy.
Mr. Manu asked if he could accompany them to Grace Cathedral, now that they
had committed to go. He had witnessed the strange phenomena around Daniel’s
body. He had also been present for Mr. Ikugpe’s voodoo Bible ritual, which had
failed. As an animist, he was curious to see what would happen next. If Nneka
had received some kind of plan that would result in Daniel’s resurrection, he did
not want to miss it. He offered to follow the ambulance in his car. Mr. Ikugpe
agreed, then suggested he transport Nneka and her son, as well.
Secretly, Nneka vowed that she would have none of this idea. She did not trust
either man to follow through with her plan. But she did not argue the point,
realizing that they would not willingly accept her refusal. Once they had loaded
Daniel’s coffin in the ambulance, she took her son by the arm and ran to the
passenger side of the ambulance. Daniel’s half brother and the driver blocked her
way, took her by the arms, and tried to escort her to Mr. Manu’s vehicle, but she
turned on them and fought with the ferocity of a lioness.
“I will not be separated from my husband!” she screamed. “Do you
understand?”
No one doubted her resolve; they decided not to press it further. She climbed
into the ambulance with her son, while Mr. Manu and Mr. Ikugpe got into the car
that would trail behind. Thus, the caravan began its seventy-mile journey to
Grace Cathedral in Onitsha.
JOURNEY IN REVERSE
As the miles passed and they drew nearer to Onitsha, Nneka could not help but
remember the heart-wrenching journey she had made just forty-eight hours ago.
She had signed her husband out of St. Charles Borromeo Hospital because he
had asked her to take him to Umezuruike Hospital in Owerri to receive better
care. The hospital had made her sign a release form, absolving the staff of all
responsibility. She recalled the terrible anxiety that had plagued her on that trip
—a journey that had resulted in her husband’s death.
Now she returned along the same road in the opposite direction. Only this time,
she was moving in response to another request her husband had given to her, in a
dream. This time, she did not feel anxiety but an assurance that she was doing
what God would have her do. She would not be knocked off course by
circumstances. This journey would result in life, not death.
The caravan arrived at Grace Cathedral around one in the afternoon. Nneka
could hear my familiar voice being projected through the loudspeakers. I was in
the middle of my sermon about the river of God, exhorting the crowd to swim in
the full stream of the Holy Spirit, letting it sweep them to new destinies in
Christ. In her mind, Nneka saw herself driving the ambulance up to the main
entrance, bringing the coffin to the front, and calling on me to lay hands on her
husband and to raise him up. Little did she know that a number of government
security officers would have a very different idea.
The ambulance was halted by armed guards before it could enter the parking
zone. Officers came to each window. The man at the driver’s window asked
about the nature of the visit. Nneka began to spill out her story, feeling desperate
now that she was so close—within earshot of my voice yet unable to continue.
The officers jerked the doors open on both sides of the car and ordered her and
the driver out. They had much less respect for her story than either Mr. Ikugpe or
Mr. Manu. Behind her, she could see the other two men with officers at both
windows of the car. Nothing was going according to her plan.
The first officer used his radio to call for backup. Soon, a large group of soldiers
came running from the upper parking area. In the lead was the Muslim head of
security, wearing dark sunglasses. They came with rifles leveled at Nneka and
the driver, taking strategic positions around both vehicles in case of trouble. She
continued to tell her story, not understanding the extra security measures that
were in place because of my visit. She could not see how outrageous her story
sounded to an objective observer under the circumstances. To the security forces,
she seemed it sounded like a desperate plot to kill me with a bomb.
“My husband is a man of God!” she screamed. “He has had an accident, and
Bonnke will pray, and he will rise up.”
The security chief looked at his lieutenant and said, “Shut her up.”
BLESSED INTERVENTION
But something happened that turned the entire situation in a new direction. The
elder who had run to the church now returned with Pastor Paul’s son. This man
was in charge of security for the church and was well-known to the security
chief. When he learned the identity of the corpse—the pastor of Power Chapel
Evangelical Church, with whose reputation he was familiar—he asked to speak
with Nneka and was led to where she stood. Speaking in kind tones, he asked her
to repeat her story. She did. When Nneka pleaded with him to let me lay my
hands on him and pray for him to rise from the dead, he told her that would be
impossible.
Yet, as he listened to her, he sensed her sincerity. And he did not want to stand
in the way of God if He had chosen to do something miraculous. He asked that
the coffin be placed back in the ambulance and kept out of sight. He felt that if it
remained in the open, it would be a disturbing image for the children who were
being tended in the nursery area. He then suggested that the best course of action
would be to take Daniel’s body to the walkout basement entrance at the rear of
the building. They could bring it into a vacant room without disturbing the
dedication service in the main auditorium.
This seemed to be a wise and brotherly approach, under the circumstances—a
solution that would relieve Nneka of her burden and also spare the Grace
Cathedral crowd the distraction of having a dead body placed in the spotlight. I
honestly don’t know what I would have done if Nneka had been allowed to
interrupt my sermon and bring Daniel to the front. The sensational nature of such
a moment surely would have taken the entire event captive. My belief is that I
would have heard from the Holy Spirit, and I would have obeyed His instruction,
whatever it was. That is how I want to operate in all situations. But we will never
know.
At the time, I was preaching under the anointing of the Holy Spirit, and I was
aware of many powerful moments of ministry among the 10,000-plus people
who had gathered there. Each of those precious souls had equal importance with
Nneka’s situation. As an evangelist, I felt an obligation to them. That is why I
had not allowed the loud disturbance in the parking lot to interrupt my sermon.
RESURRECTION
STIFF AS IRON
In Daniel’s case, a full recovery required several days. The process seemed
slow and uncertain, at first. After I left for the airport, Pastor Paul addressed the
crowd of people who had remained at Grace Cathedral. He announced that
during the service, the body of a dead man had been brought into the church and
laid on a table in the basement, and that he was now breathing. As he was
speaking from the podium, Mr. Ikugpe entered the sanctuary through a side door
and interrupted him. He raised his cane—and his patriarchal voice—and said, “I
am his father. It is true that he is now breathing. But he is still as stiff as iron. He
has been dead since Friday and has been in a mortuary.”
At this point, the entire pastoral staff was called into the basement. They
gathered around the table and began to pray. The remaining security officers
cleared the room and stood nearby, controlling the entrance and exit of curious
people. Outside, a large crowd had gathered around the ambulance. Inside it,
they could see the coffin lid and the two wads of cotton that had been packed
inside Daniel’s nostrils. Many of them snapped photos through the windows as
they listened to the story the parking lot attendants told with awe.
Inside the church, Daniel continued to breathe. A pastor who had laid hands on
his cold corpse when he had first been brought in now laid hands on his chest
and announced that heat was returning to the torso. After a while, the assistant
pastor led the group in singing hymns of praise and worship to God. For a couple
of hours, they alternated between praying and singing.
TWO KINGDOMS
As he sat and watched the entire sequence unfold, Mr. Manu must have been
reminded of the singing he had heard in the mortuary on Friday night. Mr.
Ikugpe, too, had returned to the room to watch and listen. What they saw were
Christians in action, not animists, and it began to dawn on these men that there
were two spiritual kingdoms, and that these kingdoms operated very differently.
One involved rituals, fetishes, blood sacrifices, incantations, and hitting a corpse
with a Bible seven times, producing only death and darkness. Here, they were
experiencing another spiritual kingdom, one that produced light and life and
singing.
Nneka sat quietly beside them, her son leaning against her knees. All of her
loud arguments were over. All of her weeping and pushing and fighting to see
her dream carried out had ceased. She had been beaten in order to sit and witness
this moment. She had been rejected, denounced as crazy, and deserted by
everyone who should have supported her, including the husband now breathing
on the table.
She did not need to say a word for the two men beside her on the bench to feel
shame and humiliation. It was clear Mr. Ikugpe was no longer in charge. Mr.
Manu was out of his element. Daniel was breathing, and she merely waited to
receive the full manifestation of her promise from God. She had no doubt that
she was about to become one of the women mentioned in the book of Hebrews
who had received their dead raised to life again.
I had been gone for several hours when the atmosphere in the basement grew
oppressive. Various people presented their special reasons to come inside, and,
one by one, they were allowed to enter. In the heat of the afternoon sun, the
room filled with stale air. Staff members took turns fanning Daniel’s body to
keep it from overheating.
Next, they observed rapid eye movement behind his closed eyelids. An assistant
pastor suggested that they begin to massage the body. Since the heart was now
beating, they felt that the rigor mortis might respond to their efforts. At first, they
concentrated on his hands and fingers, which, as I have said, had been injected
with embalming fluid; as a result, they were very rigid. One pastor took each
hand and massaged it as they prayed and sang. Then they moved up the arm,
rubbing it to encourage circulation. Daniel’s hands began to loosen and became
more relaxed. Encouraged by this progress, a pastor began to rub his neck. After
several minutes of this process, one of the pastors placed his hand on Daniel’s
forehead and began to move his head gently from side to side. This procedure
was filmed with a video camera. The stiffened body that Mr. Ikugpe had
described to the congregation was slowly becoming limber.
AWAKE AT LAST
This continued until late afternoon. People began to sit down and have
conversations around the room as Daniel’s body progressed toward returning to
life. Suddenly, Daniel sneezed and sat up on the table. The room exploded with
screams and praises to God. People were crying, laughing, and nearly in
hysterics. Nneka merely smiled and nodded. This was what she had expected.
Daniel’s eyes opened, and he began to look around in confusion. One of the
pastors rushed to him and embraced him tightly, but he was unable to speak. His
older son, who had witnessed the events of the entire day, rushed to him.
“Daddy! Daddy!” he cried.
But Daniel was emotionless, showing no recognition whatsoever. Nneka
stepped in and comforted the boy.
The pastoral team helped Daniel from the table and stood him up next to it. He
was quite unsteady on his feet. Just like his fingers, his toes were still curled
from the injections administered by Mr. Manu. One of the pastors suggested that
they take him upstairs to an office that had a ceiling fan. In their enthusiasm,
they began to help Daniel toward the stairwell.
Nneka Ekechukwu
comforts her husband, Daniel.
Seated beside Daniel, Nneka began to ask him how he felt. She recalled the
fatal internal injuries he had suffered. After the accident, his every breath had
been labored. She checked to see if he was breathing normally. She had him
open his mouth and saw that his tongue had turned black. But as he continued
sipping water and taking in oxygen, it began to take on a more normal color. The
worst injuries he had suffered had come about when the steering column of the
car had impaled his chest. That kind of impact is often enough to kill a man
outright. It often will stop a heart from beating. It is a lethal blow that has even
been incorporated into certain martial arts instruction.
“Do you have pain?” she asked.
“Yes,” he replied.
“Does it hurt where the steering column hit you?” She reached out and touched
his bare torso.
“No,” he said. “I hurt where those men massaged me. My neck and arms.”
Nneka was amazed. Not only had he been raised from the dead; he had been
healed of his injuries, so that he now suffered only the minor discomfort of sore
muscles.
By late afternoon, though Daniel still seemed dazed and confused, he began to
recognize his family members. He asked Nneka what the meaning of everything
was, and she told him to wait until they got home, when she would explain it all.
As evening fell, Pastor Paul and his wife came to see them. They gave Daniel a
shirt to wear. He acknowledged them but was not yet ready to communicate
freely. Nneka told Pastor Paul that Daniel had died in a car accident on Friday
and had been partially embalmed in a mortuary until that very morning. The
pastor invited them to return to his home on the following day, if possible. He
told them that I had ordered a camera crew from Christ for All Nations to come
to Onitsha to capture the story behind the resurrection. The crew would come to
his house and would want to begin filming immediately. He wanted to assist in
every way possible.
Pastor Paul offered Nneka and Daniel a ride home that night and also said he
would send a car the next day to bring them to his residence. They accepted. The
ambulance was dispatched to return the coffin to the Ikeduru General Hospital
Mortuary, where Mr. Manu would reclaim it and return it to his inventory. Mr.
Ikugpe returned to Amaimo in Mr. Manu’s car. Both animists had much to
discuss on the seventy-mile journey.
HOME AGAIN
Back home at last, Nneka wondered if things had changed between her and
Daniel. The unresolved conflict still hung like a dark cloud over her head. Would
she be banished for a year for striking him? She decided to wait until he was
ready to discuss it.
Daniel was able to walk, but with difficulty. He moved around the house,
touching things that were familiar to him. With each passing minute, he became
more normal and more able to carry on conversation. At last, he stopped to
embrace his older son. The boy’s face broke into a smile as he hugged him. He
asked about their other son, and Nneka explained that he was still in Amaimo,
under the care of their extended family. They would need to make plans to bring
him home.
Nneka put the older son to bed and returned to the main room. Daniel began to
ask her questions.
“Why was I not wearing a shirt in front of those people?”
“Do you remember the accident, my husband?” Nneka asked.
“It is not clear. I remember a hospital and an ambulance ride. You were there in
the ambulance. Two angels came with us, but they would not let me tell you that
they were there. Then they took me by the shoulders and lifted me out of the
ambulance. One of them showed me heaven and hell, and then sent me back. I
saw Reinhard Bonnke on a hilltop, and we both fell down a hole. I woke up with
all these people around me, and I had no shirt on.”
“They removed the shirt when they took you out of the coffin.”
“Coffin?”
“We brought you to the church in a coffin. We dressed you for burial at the
mortuary, but the shirt had to be cut in two because you were so stiff. Did you
know you were in the Ikeduru General Hospital Mortuary since Friday?”
“No.”
“We took you out this morning to bring you to Reinhard’s meeting.”
“I was only gone for fifteen minutes. It was not long.”
“My husband, it was part of three days,” she told him.
He was silent for a long time.
“Husband, I had a dream while you were gone,” Nneka explained. “You came
to me and told me you were not dead. You said you were unhappy that I had left
you in the mortuary. You also asked me to take your body to Reinhard Bonnke’s
meeting at Grace Cathedral. Do you remember that?”
He listened carefully but shook his head. He could relate to nothing she
described.
Nneka was troubled to hear this. The dream had been so real to her, and Daniel
seemed to remember the things he had experienced while out of his body. Why
did he not remember the message he had delivered in the dream? It had been the
very thing that had directed her to the meeting at Grace Cathedral. She had
believed it so strongly that she had resisted every other voice and had endured
fierce persecution. Still, she had been mistaken to assume that Reinhard Bonnke
would pray for her husband. Likewise, she had been sure Daniel would
remember the details of the dream. But he did not.
“I am very hungry,” he said. “Is there something I can eat?”
With his request for food, life returned to normal. Her role was the helper of her
husband. It had always been a privilege to prepare food for him. She took him
into the kitchen, then opened the refrigerator and began selecting food that she
knew he would enjoy.
Daniel noticed the abundance of food inside the refrigerator. He remembered
the pride he had felt when he had purchased this appliance for his wife. It was an
item enjoyed by few women in Onitsha, and it had been another sign of his
success as the provider for his family. But as Nneka prepared his first meal since
Friday, he saw the refrigerator in a new way.
He sat down at the table. “My wife,” he said.
She turned to look at him.
“Please come and sit down,” he said.
“But I am making—”
“Just for a minute. Please, come sit down.”
She turned from the counter and sat across from him at the table, watching his
face carefully.
He looked at her as with a pair of new eyes. “Nneka, my wife, if you ever need
forgiveness from me ever again, from this day forward, I promise you, it is like
food in the refrigerator. You come and get it. The door will always be open.”
Needless to say, the meal was delayed by a session of tears and embracing
between a husband and a very happy wife.
10
AFTERMATH
The day after Daniel’s resurrection, he and Nneka visited the home of Pastor
Paul NwaChukwu, as planned. As they related their story to him and his family,
Paul was amazed at the strong smell of formaldehyde still emanating from
Daniel’s body. Nneka pulled up Daniel’s pant legs so that the camera crews
could capture the incisions that had been made for embalming. In fact, the
chemical smell lingered on Daniel for many days as our cameramen followed the
couple, retracing the path that had led them to Grace Cathedral. For weeks
afterward, Nneka carried a cloth to soak up the chemicals as they sweat from
Daniel’s skin.
At the family compound in Amaimo, Daniel’s extended family members
flocked to see the brother who had been dead and was now alive again. His
father had not been able to stop talking about the resurrection that he had
witnessed with his own eyes. Some of the wives and brothers and sisters
swooned at Daniel’s feet when they met him for the first time since his death. As
they hugged him, many stopped and held their noses because of the chemical
smell.
As Daniel tells it today, he never had to preach to his father again. Mr. Ikugpe,
patriarch of the clan, literally sat at his feet. He asked to know the God his son
served—the true God who had raised him from the dead. After accepting Jesus
as his Savior, he assembled all of the fetishes, potions, and books of witchcraft in
the household, then had kindling for a bonfire assembled at the center of the
family compound. As everyone sang hymns, he tossed these works of darkness
into the flames. In the light of this fire, friends and family members worshipped
the only true God in a celebration of new life.
In these scenes, Nneka saw the fulfillment of her promise from the book of
Isaiah: “The sons also of them that afflicted thee shall come bending unto thee;
and all they that despised thee shall bow themselves down at the soles of thy
feet; and they shall call thee, The city of the Lord, The Zion of the Holy One of
Israel” (Isaiah 60:14).
After the resurrection, the pagan mortician, Mr. Manu, gave his life to Christ.
He eventually went to Bible college and became an evangelist. He is now
preaching the gospel in Africa and sharing Daniel’s resurrection story wherever
he goes.
Dr. Josse Anuebunwa, the doctor at St. Eunice’s Clinic, is a Catholic believer.
Our crew filmed him meeting Daniel for the first time, just days after he had
issued the death certificate bearing his signature. He was amazed and called it
shocking to see a man he had declared dead now alive. “To God all glory should
go,” he said.
WITCHES IN VIENNA
Shortly after our crew had finished filming in Nigeria, they sent video clips to
me for review. I could see that the story was absolutely amazing, filled with
many details that confirmed the claim of resurrection. Early in 2002, I had
scheduled a Fire Conference in Vienna, Austria, and I invited Daniel to come
and give his testimony. It was absolutely electrifying to hear the story from the
man who had been partially embalmed and spent the better part of three days in
a mortuary. The crowd was spellbound.
Afterward, a man approached Daniel with a special request. He asked if he
would come and speak at another event taking place in Vienna at the same time.
It turned out that while we were holding our meeting there, the annual Esoteric
Fair was in progress at another venue. This meant that shamans and witch
doctors from around the world had gathered with crowds of people embracing
alternative medicine. For several days, they would explore the interface between
the physical and the spiritual world. The news of Daniel Ekechukwu’s
resurrection had already circulated throughout the networks of esoteric belief
and practice. Of course, you might call this mere coincidence; but I would call it
divine appointment.
We knew that the Esoteric Fair would be filled with those who did not know
that there were two spiritual kingdoms at war with one another. The attendees
had no clue that one kingdom had declared victory over the other through the
resurrection of Jesus Christ. The man from the conference told Daniel they were
willing to change their schedule for the opportunity to hear from a man who had
been dead for three days and was now alive. Daniel brought the request to me for
advice.
Well, I am an evangelist. What do you think I told him? “Go, Daniel! Go, and
tell them your story. Then, preach the message of the gospel and give an altar
call, right there in the middle of the Esoteric Fair. This is a door of opportunity
for the gospel.”
I must admit to feelings of jealousy. How I wished they had asked me to preach
to that crowd. But their interest was fully aroused by Daniel’s resurrection story.
Naturally, they wanted to hear from him. I could hardly wait to hear of their
response.
Daniel went and preached. When he returned to the Fire Conference, I called
him to the platform. In front of our crowd, I asked him what had happened. He
said that he had testified, preached, and given an altar call. Eighty witches and
shamans had come forward to accept Jesus Christ as Savior. Hallelujah!
AMAZING FAITH
At the final service of our meeting, Daniel presented me with his death
certificate. He said that he wanted me to have it, to always remember what
happened in Onitsha. I thanked him for his generosity, but I did not feel right
about receiving the gift. I held up the certificate and read it aloud to the crowd.
Then I said to Daniel, “No, Daniel, this death certificate does not fit on my wall.
You and Nneka should hang it on your wall at home. It is proof of the mighty
miracle the Lord has done in your life, and a reminder of Nneka’s amazing faith
to see it through.”
After the meeting, I had the certificate framed and sent to them, but not before I
took a picture of it—a picture that remains in my records to this day.
NNEKA’S REWARD
In the months and years that followed, Daniel was invited to speak of his
resurrection at events around the world. Nneka traveled with him whenever she
was able to arrange proper care for their children, who now number four.
Whenever he speaks, Daniel always gives Nneka the opportunity to share her
side of their story. He has remained very vocal about the fact that his miraculous
resurrection would not have happened without the faith and actions of his
amazing wife. Together, they speak of the need to live in a constant state of
forgiveness—to forgive others, just as we have been forgiven by God. The
promise Nneka received from God in the vision of her ministering hand in hand
with her husband has come to pass.
Christ for All Nations produced and made hundreds of thousands of copies of
the DVD documentary, Raised from the Dead, which have circulated around the
world. Through this story, more lives have been touched for all eternity than we
will ever know on this side of heaven.
I recall one pastor of a megachurch in the United States calling me to say that
he had shown the video to his congregation. At the end of the video, I preach a
short salvation message in which I invite viewers to receive Jesus as Savior.
After my invitation, that pastor gave an altar call. “We have never seen such a
response in all our years of ministry,” he said. That pastor went on to order nine
thousand copies of the DVD for distribution as witnessing tools in his
congregation.
My staff received a call from another American pastor who had been flying
back from a mission trip to India when a flight attendant told him that she had
been a Hindu but had become a Christian believer after seeing Raised from the
Dead. Before meeting that woman, this pastor had never heard of Reinhard
Bonnke or Christ for All Nations. Wanting to witness for himself what had
worked so powerfully in the life of that flight attendant, he had then purchased
several copies of the DVD.
We hear stories like these again and again, too numerous to list, as we continue
to distribute the DVD around the world. Our point in telling about this miracle is
to bring people to a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ. I am gratified to have
played a small role in seeing this happen.
11
DANIEL’S FILE
So far, we have followed a trail of evidence that can be verified and put to the
test. In fact, the elements of this miracle have been put to many tests. The people
and places involved with Daniel’s death, embalming, and resurrection from the
dead have been located and questioned by many investigators, many times. Their
findings compose a mounting body of evidence that points to the fact that Daniel
was declared dead on November 30, 2001, and raised to life again on December
2, 2001, at Grace Cathedral in Onitsha, Nigeria.
However, as we endeavor to describe Daniel’s out-of-body trip to heaven and
hell, we enter a different kind of territory. The things Daniel saw and heard in
this part of the story cannot be verified. We cannot visit the places he visited; we
cannot speak to the angel who guided him there. The details he describes are
subject to the unique perception and recollection of his own mind. This is true
for anyone who reports such happenings, and in every case, there comes a point
at which the person who has visited another realm says, “There are no words to
adequately describe it.”
I think, however, that it is amazing to notice the many similarities between
Daniel’s account and those of others who have reported such things. In fact, we
have similar descriptions recorded in the Bible. I do not doubt that people who
die, or are near death, sometimes experience out-of-body travels into other
dimensions of reality, where they encounter supernatural beings who really exist.
DANIEL’S JOURNEY
The point at which Daniel’s experience departed from Nneka’s was during the
ambulance ride to Owerri. As he began to die, he says, he looked up and saw
two angels—pure white beings—inside the vehicle, behind his wife. They
glowed and were clothed in white. Their clothing and their flesh seemed to be of
one substance. One of the angels placed his finger to his lips, as if to say that
Daniel should not mention their presence to Nneka. He got the impression that if
he were to tell her about the angels, she might become unduly alarmed. So,
Daniel began to give her instructions about caring for the children and the
church after he was gone. He felt happy to be dying. The pleasant sensations that
went with the experience made it easy to leave everything, and everyone,
behind.
The two angels then took him by the hands and lifted him out of his body. They
turned and hovered above the ambulance with him, and he could see clearly
through the roof. He saw and heard Nneka praying desperately over his body,
saying, “No, no, no! You will live and not die, in Jesus’ name.”
He noticed that his earthly body was splattered with blood and badly damaged.
There was an oxygen tube in his nose and an IV in his arm. By contrast, his
spirit-body seemed to be in perfect order. He was happy to be free of his old,
familiar body below. The two angels took him to a third angel, who told him that
there were places for him to see in paradise. The angel gave him a file and a pen
and told him to take notes of the things that he saw.
They moved without effort. The angel had only to address a destination, and
they were transported there. First, they visited a place filled with beings who
were glowing white and looked identical to the angels. Daniel asked if this was a
gathering of angels, but the angel said that they were human beings who had
served God and kept their faith focused on Christ Jesus while on earth. The
beings looked up and worshipped a light that was too bright for Daniel to look
at. They sang, bowed down, and raised their hands in perfect unison. He opened
his file and began to make notes of the details that he saw. He then made an
effort to join the worshippers, but the angel prevented him, saying that there
were others things to see.
Next, the angelic guide took Daniel to visit the mansions that Jesus mentioned
in John 14:2: “In my Father’s house are many mansions.” At first, Daniel
thought that they were made of glass. But a closer inspection revealed that they
were fashioned of some sort of gold. The floors seemed to be made of light. He
wrote feverishly about the various wonders of these buildings, but he was baffled
because they were strangely quiet and empty. The angel explained that the
heavenly mansions were ready, but the saints of God are not.
SENT BACK
The angel then told him that he was being given another chance—being sent
back to earth. The angel added that Daniel would serve as a last warning to this
generation. He then was swept into a kind of black tunnel that took him
downward. He sneezed and woke up in the basement of the church, hearing my
voice through the loudspeakers in Grace Cathedral as I preached to the audience
in the sanctuary. Thus ended Daniel’s trip to the afterlife.
With these descriptions of his out-of-body experience, we can understand why
Daniel began to ask for his file immediately after regaining consciousness. He
was distressed to suddenly find himself without it. He had just come from
recording the details of heaven and hell, as he had seen them. Now, he suddenly
found himself naked from the waist up, lying in a dimly lit basement that was
filled with people. He was being gawked at by shouting, praying, laughing,
singing people, and was not really sure if he was in heaven, in hell, or on earth.
No wonder he was confused. Nevertheless, he was very aware that he had no file
of the record he had recently made, and, in his confusion, he began to ask for it.
Many days later, Daniel gave up searching for the file. He came to believe that
perhaps it had been merely a symbol of the memories he had collected during his
journey.
Everything Daniel experienced while out of his earthly body seemed more real
to him than the day in, day out reality of life on earth. Even though his earthly
body had received healing, it did not have the same freedom of movement as his
spiritual body. Given a choice between the two, he said he would choose his
spiritual existence without hesitation. In the same way that his spiritual body
disappeared as he reentered his earthly body, so too the file of information he
had collected in heaven and hell had disappeared. It was left behind. Like others
who have traveled to the other side of life’s curtain, Daniel was left with only
imperfect memories, finding himself at a loss for words to fully describe the
sights he had seen.
RARE BREED
Richard’s story is so special, I fear that I will not do it justice. But I must try. I
had last seen him in Bukavu, on the extreme eastern border of the Congo. Yes, it
was Bukavu, 1989. How ever did we get there, to that far-off city?
Our journey had started, as I recall, with a scouting report. Such reports became
necessary after one of our trucks sank in a river in the Congo. I don’t remember
which river it was, after thirty years of crusades, nor do I recall the exact year.
Anyway, grand old Congo, known today as Zaire, is the most legendary country
of Africa. It provided the backdrop for Joseph Conrad’s classic story Heart of
Darkness. Missionaries have told tales of the Congo since the days of Stanley
and Livingstone. It is a vast land, three times larger than the state of Texas, with
plenty of rivers big enough to swallow a truck.
I remember that our truck was loaded with gear for a crusade. It rolled onto a
ferry and began the crossing. The rainy season had come early, and in the middle
of the river, the ferry began to take on water. Down it went, with our driver
inside. He managed to get a window open and escaped to the surface of the
torrent, swimming for shore while praying for an absence of crocodiles.
Because of incidents like this, our team began to send out scouts in advance of
the crusade ground crew. They would create customized road maps for our
convoy to use. When our team traveled to any particular city, they would take
advantage of our maps and notations to avoid hazards.
Our scouts traveled in Land Rovers equipped with chainsaws for clearing fallen
trees. And since there are no “Mr. Goodwrench” signs on the fix-it shops in the
bush, they carried every conceivable tool for fixing mechanical troubles on the
back roads of Africa. Our scouts are a special breed of problem solver, and over
the years, they have collected stories to fill a book many times larger than this
one, believe me.
Whenever they travel, they investigate more than just road conditions. They
check out the potential areas in the city suitable for us to set up our crusade
platform. They log information about power, water, sewage, local police, crowd
control, and any other detail that could benefit our planning team. There are a
thousand ways to go wrong when conducting an African crusade; and, over the
years, we have discovered them all. Our goal is simply not to repeat any
mistakes. We have learned much, and our scouts are some of the most
experienced and most fascinating members of our team. They have saved us
untold misery, and we have not lost another truck in a river.
CITY IN NEED
In the late 1980s, a scouting team searched the back roads of the far eastern
Congo. As they neared the Rwandan border, they came across Bukavu, a city
that was not on our list of potential crusade sites. Our planners had simply
overlooked it. Nearly a half million citizens lived there, people who had never
seen a Christ for All Nations evangelistic crusade. Furthermore, the scouting
team had confirmed that the roads to the city were passable in the summer.
Steven Mutua, a team worker, called me at our headquarters in Frankfurt.
“Nobody comes to Bukavu, Reinhard,” he said excitedly. “We will see
tremendous results. It will be glorious.”
Nothing makes my heart beat faster than preaching the gospel in new territory.
This began with my first assignment in the gospel-hardened land of Lesotho, in
the southern part of Africa, in 1969.
“Begin planning a crusade in Bukavu,” I ordered. “Steven, you will be in
charge.”
In July 1989, I flew there to preach. My team escorted me to the hotel where I
would be staying. The next day, as I do for every crusade, I asked to be driven
around the city. Steven had been preparing this event for months, and I wanted
him to show me the local community. I wanted to hear from him all that he had
learned about the history and lore of Bukavu. We took a local interpreter with us,
so that we could interview people in the marketplaces and neighborhoods as we
passed through.
A PLACE OF FEAR
At one point during the tour, we came to a prison. It was really more of a cage
for humans near the edge of the city. There were no cells, just a large brick room
with a prison yard attached, surrounded by bars and razor wire. Many of the
prisoners were in the yard, taking in sunshine and exercising in the open air. A
crowd of people stood near the iron bars bordering the yard. Steven stopped the
car and turned the engine off.
“Who are those people outside of the prison yard?” I asked.
“Those are family members. If they don’t feed the men inside, they will die of
starvation. The government makes no provision for feeding men they intend to
kill.”
“All these prisoners will die?”
“All of the ones you see in shackles are condemned to die.”
I could see a number of men walking around dragging heavy chains shackled to
their arms and legs.
Steven pointed to a large tree with heavy spreading branches outside the yard.
“Every month, a hangman comes from Kinshasa. The hangman earns his living
the old-fashioned way. There is no scaffold. The condemned men are brought
out to the tree, and a rope with a hangman’s noose tied to the end is thrown over
the big branch. The people are invited to watch, and many do. It is not a merciful
hanging, like in movies about the Old West, where there is a long drop that
breaks the neck. Each condemned man in this prison must move forward, one by
one, as the noose is placed around his neck. Then the hangman uses the trunk of
the tree for leverage to lift the man up, and he ties the rope off until the kicking
and choking stops. Then, he lets the body down and goes to the next man.”
“Have you seen this?”
“I have seen it.”
“Can you imagine being one of the condemned, forced to watch what is in store
for you?”
VISIBLE EVIL
“That is not all,” Steven continued. “When a man is cut down, the hangman
hacks off his hands and feet with an ax so that the shackles can be removed.
Unless the family comes to claim it, the body is tossed onto a cart and dumped in
an unmarked grave.”
“Why doesn’t the hangman simply unlock the shackles? Why go to the extreme
of cutting off the hands and feet?”
“Because there is no lock. When a condemned man is brought here, he is taken
to a blacksmith shed over there, and shackles are welded shut on his arms and
legs.”
“How do they do that without burning the flesh?”
“The men receive horrible burns. It is part of the punishment. They are
considered to be dead already, and no one cares to take care of them. Some have
actually died of infections that set into the burns before they could be hung. The
empty shackles taken from a dead man are opened with a cutting torch and
prepared for the next condemned man. And on it goes.”
FAITH SPEAKS
We were introduced to the group of condemned men. I greeted the brothers who
had accepted the Lord in the name of Jesus. Then, through the interpreter, I gave
the whole group a sermon on salvation. A few of them responded, accepting
Jesus for the first time. I then encouraged them in the Lord.
After that, I turned to Steven. “Tell that man who was leading the singing that I
would like to speak to him in private.”
Steven went to the man and explained my request. He brought him to me, with
the interpreter. We walked to a vacant area in the yard.
“Reinhard,” Steven said, “this man’s name is Richard.”
It was an honor to shake his shackled hand. “Tell Richard that the Lord has
spoken to me today. The Lord says that he will be set free.”
The interpreter hesitated.
I nodded. “Repeat my words exactly,” I said.
He cleared his throat and then spoke to the man in his native tongue.
The man reacted, looking away toward the hanging tree. When he looked back
at me, his eyes were filled with tears. He spoke through the interpreter, “Three
times, I have waited in line. Three times, the hangman has become too tired to
hang me. The last time he was here, I was the next man to die. The hangman
glared at me like he wanted to see me dead. Then he threw up his hands and
went home.”
“Jesus preserves you, Richard,” I said. “And now He says you will be set free.”
A POLITICAL SOLUTION
When we arrived at the politician’s mansion, we were ushered into a waiting
area. We were kept waiting for a long time. Waiting to see powerful people in
Africa is something that I have learned that I must do. Finally, a secretary
emerged from the inner sanctum and told us that the politician I wished to see
was not available.
Now, if this were true, I thought, they might have told us earlier, in time to spare
us this trip. Either it is a lie, or they have decided the great evangelist must
prove his Christianity by demonstrating nearly infinite patience in the waiting
room.
The politician was on a trip to Kinshasa, we were told. Instead of seeing him,
we would be allowed to meet briefly with his wife. She would relay everything
to her husband after we had gone.
After more waiting, a tall woman entered the room. She was dressed in finery
and beautiful fabrics. I thought she carried herself with what must have been the
imperial dignity of the Queen of Sheba. When she had made her entrance, an
interpreter was provided, and I was able, at last, to speak with her.
After the formalities were over, I told her why I had asked to see her husband. I
had come to plead for the release of a condemned man in Bukavu prison—a man
named Richard. I described him to her, and I recounted his story of the crime for
which he had been sentenced to die. I suggested to her that a competent lawyer
would surely have made a case for self-defense. A good lawyer would have at
least found a way to avoid the death penalty for Richard. Then I told her of
Richard’s conversion and of the way he led the singing among the condemned
men in the prison.
She listened carefully to all that I said. Then she stood and excused herself. She
said that she would see about what could be done, but condemned prisoners were
never released from Bukavu prison once the courts had spoken.
After we spent another long time waiting, she returned. She asked that all of the
other guests be removed from the room. At last, it was just the two of us. She
stood before me, very close.
AFRICA, SAMARIA,
AND NOW, AMERICA
One of the principles of my life is that I jump when God speaks. There is no
need to sleep on it. When God speaks, it is always urgent. I rush to obey. As in
the story of Richard in Bukavu, I have never been disappointed by obeying the
voice of God. Likewise, on December 2, 2001, when Daniel Ekechukwu jumped
out of his coffin, I jumped to the telephone. I knew God had made clear His
answer to my prayer in the Sheraton Lagos Hotel: “Lord, this time I am asking
You for a sign. I’ve never asked You for signs, but this time, I need a sign. If You
want me to move to America, I want You to do something that I have never ever
seen happen in my ministry.”
That prayer was still fresh in my mind when I heard the words “He’s
breathing!” Soon thereafter, the miracle was confirmed. I telephoned my wife,
Anni, in Frankfurt, Germany, insisting that by Christmas, we would be in
America. In fact, we arrived on Christmas Day. The plane was nearly empty
because so many had already traveled to their holiday destinations. We found a
lovely home in Vero Beach, Florida, where we live to this day.
For a decade, Orlando has served as the worldwide headquarters of Christ for
All Nations. The Full Flame Film Series was completed at Universal Studios and
is still being distributed worldwide, as is the DVD about Daniel Ekechukwu,
Raised from the Dead. As a result of the move, I have been able to speak to
many more Americans, which has increased the number of our ministry partners.
This, in turn, has improved our ability to conduct crusades in those places where
the Lord directs us.
Since coming to America, God has introduced to our ministry Daniel Kolenda,
a young evangelist with the same passion for the lost that grips my soul. God
spoke to me to raise this man up to do what I do. And this, we have done. We are
seeing Daniel Kolenda preach the same gospel and reap the same harvest that I
have seen for so long now. In retrospect, the resurrection of Daniel Ekechukwu
in Africa led directly to the raising of another Daniel in America—a man who
happens to be my successor. It has been like watching pieces of a puzzle fall into
place, one after another. And it has all seemed so satisfying and complete.
A WAKE-UP CALL
But the story does not end here. Imagine my surprise in the summer of 2012
when I learned that my decision to come to America was of far more
significance than I had dreamed. In fact, I have only begun to understand it,
because, once again, God has spoken of things that defy my natural mind. He
began to stir my heart, saying, I did not bring you to America so that America
could be the offering plate for Africa. I brought you to America for America’s
sake.
When I heard this, I was deeply touched and moved to tears in my prayer time.
I never would have presumed that I might be chosen for such a purpose. The
history of the United States, with its godly forefathers and inspired founding
documents, cannot be equaled in the world. No other land has borne such fruit or
produced such powerful ministries, including the worldwide explosion of
Christian broadcasting. No other people have supported missionary outreaches
with even a fraction of the resources from the church in America. American
believers are the full alphabet of Christian generosity. How could I imagine that
God would use me to preach to them the simple ABCs of the gospel?
But God said to me, Every generation needs regeneration. To me, this means
the gospel must be preached, again and again. The previous crusades, revivals,
and awakenings in the United States are not enough. The gospel must be
received again in every generation. America is clearly a land in need of the
preached gospel.
Much of the American population acts as if they have not heard the Good
News. That is because the gospel must be presented clearly. Many churches have
become so “seeker friendly” that the gospel has become disguised as just another
self-help manual. But the gospel wears no mask. It is the power of God to save
the lost, to deliver from guilt and from the crippling power of sin. The Holy
Spirit has clothed Himself with the gospel. Paul said, “For our gospel came not
unto you in word only, but also in power, and in the Holy Ghost” (1
Thessalonians 1:5). When the gospel is preached, the Holy Spirit operates in
power.